� � � � �����������������������������ͻ � T R U S T N O O N E � �����������������������������ͼ � � � � /\ +--+ +----+ / \ //======// ===\\ / \ // // \\ / \ //====// ==\\ +------------+ /// \\======================================/// \\====================================/// Things to beware of in 1997: Earth, wind, and fire. Or, more preciesely, earthquakes, tornados, and volcanos (new ones). The weather, it is a-changin. ------------------------------------------------------------------- From the Chicago Tribune, today's issue: MYSTERY DEATHS Comet photo spins web of debate By Peter Kendall TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER Of all the photos of Comet Hale-Bopp made at observatories around the world, none compare with the one radio broadcaster Chuck Shramek took with his backyard telescope in Houston. His was the only one that showed a spaceship riding alongside the comet. Shramek's image, posted on the World Wide Web, is proof of at least one thing: Ancient superstitions about comets haven't disappeared in the information age. They've only gone on-line. Almost from the day Comet Hale-Bopp was discovered in 1995, people have been flooding the Internet with dire predictions and prognostications about the "Millennial Comet." And of course, they say, the government is covering up the truth. Early on, some people became alarmed when they noticed that the orbit of the comet seemed to be changing. "The comet has consistently demonstrated its ability to change course," one Internet posting said. "Although comets do make slight course changes due to off-gassing, some of these mid-course corrections, for lack of a better term, are quite significant." Something, it appeared, was steering the comet. NASA, however, had a different explanation: It wasn't that the comet was changing direction, but that the longer scientists watched it, the better they could calculate its true direction. The orbit controversy was only whetting the conspiratorial appetite for Shramek's photo of what some people simply call the "SLO" -- the Saturn-like object. To Shramek, it is a snapshot of a "mysterious spacecraft" following the comet. After taking the picture, Shramek appeared on a national radio show hosted by Art Bell, who helped launch the picture into notoriety. Alan Hale, one of the comet's two discoverers, wrote in the March edition of the Skeptical Inquirer magazine that he looked at the photo and noticed something right away. The "spacecraft" happened to be in the same position as a star the comet was passing. "The Saturn-like rings extending from the object were apparently nothing more than a diffraction effect, a common occurrence with over-exposed stellar images on astronomical photographs," Hale wrote. If Shramek had only focused his telescope properly, the spacecraft would have disappeared, Hale suggested. But the debunking of Shramek's photo by Hale and other scientists serves as a kind of proof of its authenticity to some. "I must have come close to revealing some truth that the powers that be wanted to be kept a secret or nobody would have cared," Shramek wrote on his home page. Shortly after Shramek's photo was posted on the Internet, rumors circulated about strange radio signals emanating from the comet. And then there was the reputed cover-up. The Hubble Space Telescope, which had been snapping pictures of the comet, suddenly had stopped doing so for several months. Again, scientists had an explanation. The comet had been so close to the sun that aiming the telescope's delicate instruments in its direction would have risked burning them out. "If a great catastrophe were coming, and our government knew, why wouldn't they tell us?" one Web page asks. "Wouldn't they want to give us a chance to be prepared for such an event? Is it because they're more interested in protecting the financial markets than human life?"